Western Players Favored in
1997 USCA International Rules
National Championship
in Oakland, California
by Bob Alman
Posted September 15, 1997

The first edition of the USCA International Rules National Championship was
played in 1987, at a time when few American croquet players were familiar
with the rules played by every other major association in the world. Since
then, more higher-handicap Americans have learned the game, but it still is
played far less frequently than the American rules version codified with the
founding of the USCA in the late seventies. The International Rules
version, however, is the clear choice of many if not most of the top-ranked
players in America - especially those of the calibre likely to be chosen to
represent the United States in international events.

Oakland's three greens sit in the middle of a busy municipal park on a
peninsula fronting Lake Merritt, near the downtown business district.

For the first time in its 11-year history the USCA International Rules
National Championship is being played on public courts - three superbly
maintained bowling greens which are the centerpiece of a busy municipal park
near downtown Oakland, California.

Lakeside Park is a peninsula jutting into Lake Merritt, which graces the
urban setting with a picture-postcard ambience that belies the reputation of
the Bay Area's second largest city as a capital of crime and squalor. The
park was created at the turn of the century, when Oakland's ideal weather and
locale had made it a favorite residence of upscale Californians. The three
bowling greens date from 1904 and surround a clubhouse that is a registered
landmark.

On the opposite lakeshore is the Clarion Suites Lake Merritt Hotel, also a
landmark and recently restored to its original Art Deco splendor. The hotel
is giving the tournament a cocktail party to dedicate the "croquet suite" in
recognition of the USCA's patronage for four straight years - in one USCA
Regional and two California State Championships and now in the first
nationally sanctioned event to be held in Oakland.

Oakland may be the most underrated venue in croquet

The national championship will help to spread the secret that California
croquet players have known for years - that this very public croquet venue is
a beautiful and exciting place to hold a major tournament. Two of the three
lawns front on the only street that circles through the park, so thousands of
passers-by - most of them on foot - will have an opportunity to notice that,
for once, these greens are occupied by mallet-wielding gentlemen several
decades younger, on average, than the usual tenants.

One of the top-flight favorites, in fact, is only 15. Jacques Fournier, the
Phoenix, Arizona "wunderkind", in recent years has gained not just in height
and maturity, but also in stature in the croquet world. In July he won the
prestigious Meadowood Invitational, and he'll be representing the United
States in November in the World Championships in Bunbury, Australia - along
with his older brother, Don Fournier, Jr.

The odds-on favorite to win is Meadowood's croquet pro, Jerry Stark, also
Bunbury-bound. Stark recently won The Resort At the Mountain Invitational (a
star-studded purse event at the new resort on the slopes of Mount Hood in
Oregon) and is showing top form. He has played before on the hard, dry, and
dauntingly fast lawns of Lakeside Park.

A third American who will also be honing his competitive edge in preparation
for the Australian games is South California's Mik Mehas. Mehas finished
second in the tournament in 1996 (to Canada's Leo McBride) and can usually be
counted on to fight his way to the final rounds.

California and Arizona players favored to reach final rounds

The top flight, with 18 players, constitutes one of the strongest
International Rules events in the U.S. this year and restores this national
tournament to its former eminence, after a lapse of several years. In 1995
and 1996, the championship was held in Kentucky and was not able to attract a
broad national representation. Not since 1994, when the tournament was in
Pinehurst, North Carolina, has the tournament had a top flight worthy of a
national championship. In that year - as in 1997 - eighteen players competed
in the top flight, which was won by Tony Stephens of New Zealand, with John
Taves of Seattle in second and Jerry Stark and Mik Mehas sharing third.

Only one player in this year's championship can boast of having already won
it. David Openshaw, the "old man" of the British international teams took
the top trophy in 1991 at the Meadow Club in Southampton, New York, and he
could do it again in Oakland in 1997.

Although the tournament is strong, several top players are notably missing,
including John Taves and Wayne Rodoni, ranked No. 1 and No. 3 respectively in
International Rules among the Americans. These champions, like other strong
local players - Carl Hanson and Sal Esquivel among them - are prevented by
work and family obligations from playing in a five-day event.

Nevertheless, the tournament benefits from the participation of many
Westerners, and most observers would be surprised if one of them did not win
it. The presence of so many strong International Rules players in the West
was a major reason for bringing the tournament West to California for the
third time in 11 years.

How to produce a great tournament and not make a profit

But like many other USCA-sanctioned tournaments not held at the headquarters
venue in Palm Beach, this event will not produce any income for the national
organization - because it isn't big enough to cover the expenses of what is
intended to be a fund-raiser. Even though locally donated parties, goods,
and services help to keep expenses down, the major expense of bringing to
town the National Director of Croquet virtually knocks the tournament into
the red. Most people would agree that the National Director should
officiate at a titled tournament, so to maintain this standard, it may be
necessary in the future to have the tournament at national headquarters -
until the sport grows to support bigger numbers, or until the International
Rules game attracts a great enough following in America to produce a "social
flight" which could support the tournament financially.

In the meantime - although it's too bad the tournament will not produce
income for a financially pressed national organization - a relative scarcity
of players in the social flight translates to abundant court space and
playing time for the eighteen players intent on covering themselves in glory
in the Championship Flight and battling through to the finals. More than
glory is involved: This event is one of the few that is considered in the
selection of future international teams. The top prize grants automatic
entry to some of the most prestigious invitationals in the world - including
the Chatooga Challenge, which is the top purse event of 1998 yet to be
announced.

The action starts on Wednesday, September 17, and ends with finals on Sunday,
September 21. Each day's play will begin in Oakland at 8:00 AM and last
until near sunset. On some days, courts in San Francisco's Stern Grove will
also be used.

CROQUET WORLD ONLINE MAGAZINE will cover the tournament in several despatches
by tournament director Mike Weimerskirch and manager Bob Alman.